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1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue
#85
12 December 2006
2007: CHALLENGES & OPPORTUNITIES FOR IMPLEMENTING 1325
The
Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1325 on women, peace
and security, 31 October 2000. CLICK
HERE for the full text of the resolution.
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THIS ISSUE OF 1325 PEACEWOMEN E-NEWS FEATURES:
1. Editorial:2007: Challenges
& Opportunities For Implementing 1325
2. Women, Peace and Security News
3. Feature Initiative:
Mama Cash – Campaign 88 Days
4. Feature Resource: Reports
on: Psychosocial Challenges and Interventions for Women Affected
by Conflict & Gender Based Violence and HIV/AIDS
5. Gender & Peacekeeping Update:
News, Resources & Peacekeeping Watch
6. UNIFEM Update:
New Security Council Members and SCR 1325
7. Women, Peace and Security Calendar
The PeaceWomen Project is a project of the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom. Please visit us at http://www.peacewomen.org.
1.
EDITORIAL
The PeaceWomen Team
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This first edition for 2007 of the
PeaceWomen E-News presents an opportunity to reflect the broad range
of issues and actors in the women, peace and security sphere. We
hope that 2007 is a year in which we see positive activity and action
from all relevant actors and on a multiplicity of fronts. Certainly
in the area of women’s rights, the Mama Cash Campaign 88 days
(item 3) is a strong example of action for social change across
geographic boundaries and in several spheres of activity. Of the
projects supported by Mama Cash and highlighted here, there is exciting
work being done by women on many conflict-related issues –
from work with refugees on the Thai-Burma border to projects working
to eradicate trafficking in Central Europe from a holistic feminist
standpoint. The UNIFEM Update (item 7) also reflects the strong
possibilities for collaboration between the UN, Member States and
civil society to advance implementation of 1325. As reflected in
our range of news stories (see item 2), issues of gender and conflict
are ones that arise across the globe from Africa to Latin America
to Asia and the Middle East and from conflict prevention to post-conflict
reconstruction. As our December issue highlighted, the issue of
sexual and gender-based violence in conflict remains critical. The
issue has gained particular prominence as allegations of such abuse
by UN personnel have arisen over the years. As highlighted in our
Peacekeeping Watch (item 5) the UN system is taking steps to deal
with this. While abuse by peacekeepers is deplorable, it is important
that we do not focus on this site of violence as the only one in
conflict affected countries. Resources and attention should not
be focused on these incidents at the expense of addressing the widespread
violence that occurs outside of the peacekeeping context. Furthermore,
violence against women does not stop on the cessation of hostilities
– women’s groups in Liberia, for example, are currently
struggling with continuing violence and impunity in the aftermath
of war. International Women’s Day (March 8) this year will
focus on the issue of ending impunity and we welcome contributions
and hope to reflect current efforts to deal with this issue in forthcoming
editions of the newsletter.
The effects of sexual and gender-based
violence are complex and wide-ranging and our resources section
(Item 4) features two resources that look at some particularly pertinent
health issues. Women are, however, not only victims of conflict
but play a variety of roles as peacemakers but also as combatants
and both within civil society and within formal institutions. The
all-female police unit deployed to Liberia (see item 5) has garnered
much attention – not all of it useful. It is important that
we consider not simply the numbers of women in such units but the
operational impact of their being women. Otherwise we risk such
moves becoming gimmicks and window dressing. As Resolution 1325
recognizes, having greater participation of women in all conflict
management processes, including institutions such as peacekeeping
missions enhances their operational impact and sustainability. Both
men and women can efficiently undertake many peacekeeping responsibilities
but there are some situations, such as in the aftermath of sexual
violence or where there is culturally mandated separation between
men and women, that can only or best be addressed by women. It is
suggested that some specific activities may benefit from, or require
women to carry them out (for example screening, cordon and search
activities where women are involved). It is also argued by some
that the presence of women in such roles may provide a positive
influence in the traditionally masculine or macho military culture.
As this month’s peacekeeping resource indicates, however,
despite growing recognition and understanding of these possible
impacts and the value of women’s engagement in peacekeeping
efforts, there is a serious implementation gap. Levels of women’s
representation and participation remain dismally low – not
only in operations but also at the policy-making level.
The gap between rhetoric and reality
is one with which we continue to grapple. PeaceWomen sincerely hopes
that this year is one in which real progress is made on implementing
1325 in an effective and sustained way.
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As always we welcome your contributions to the newsletter’s
content. Contributions for the February edition should be sent to
enewssubmissions@peacewomen.org
by Thursday 15 February 2007.
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2.
WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
GLOBAL
EXPERTS ENCOURAGE WOMEN AS PEACEKEEPERS
January 19, 2007 (AllAfrica.com) Experts in peace-building have
called on African women to become involved with peacekeeping from
the start of negotiations to end conflicts, and not to allow themselves
to be excluded.
INTERNATIONAL
JUSTICE FAILING RAPE VICTIMS
Jan 5, 2007 -(Institute for War and Peace Reporting)Despite significant
strides in international law, many sexual violence crimes are going
unpunished because of flawed investigations and prosecutions.
LIBERIA:
GOVERNMENT, WOMEN'S GROUPS DECRY POST-WAR SEXUAL VIOLENCE
January 15, 2007 (IRIN/PLUSNEWS) - Rising levels of reported rape
and sexual exploitation of women and teenage girls in Liberia have
sparked concern by both the government and women's rights groups.
Despite a peace agreement in 2003 that ended the particularly brutal
14-year civil war, during which fighters sexually assaulted girls
and women and sometimes used them as "sex slaves", these
types of violent abuse were still common, according to Lois Bruthus,
head of the Association of Female Lawyers of Liberia (AFELL), a
leading advocacy group."The raping of girls and women is a
major problem ... we have been trying to curtail [these attacks],
but it still continues," Bruthus told IRIN/PlusNews. Strong
anti-rape legislation is in place, but women's groups have charged
that a weak court system was hampering rape convictions.
WOMEN
BRAINSTORM ON PEACE-BUILDING IN SIERRA LEONE
January 15, 2007 - (Awareness Times Newspaper – Freetown)
The Ministry of Social Welfare Gender and Children’s Affairs,
in collaboration with UNICEF and the United Nations Peace Building
Support Office, has organized a two-day National Consultation for
enhancing women’s engagement with the Peace Building Commission
in Sierra Leone. The meeting, which attracted a galaxy of important
personalities, including women, commenced last Wednesday, 10th January,
at the Kimbima Hotel, Aberdeen, in Freetown.
RWANDA
WOMEN MPS TO HOST INTERNATIONAL SUMMIT
January 8, 2007 (The New Times) Members of the Forum of Rwanda Women
Parliamentarians (FFRP) will February 22-23, host an international
conference to share experiences with their counterparts from various
countries around the world. The disclosure was made January 5 by
the Forum president Judith Kanakuze, during a FFRP meeting held
at the Novotel Hotel. Kanakuze said the conference will be attended
400 delegates, with half the number MPs from other countries. She
added that all African countries had been invited for the conference,
whose theme will focus on the role of Parliament in ending gender
based violence and poverty.
SOMALIA:
CHILDREN, WOMEN MOST AFFECTED BY FIGHTING
January 12, 2007 (IRIN) Scores of women and children have been separated
from their families or wounded in fighting between Somali government
forces and remnants of the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), sources
said. A source in southern Somalia, close to the area where air
strikes have hit suspected UIC bases, told IRIN on Friday that some
civilians, including women and children, "have been killed
and others wounded". There are reports of many children between
the ages of five and 15 missing from the village of Hayo (10 km
from the area where the air strikes have been taking place), he
added. "We have no way of knowing how many dead or wounded
are out there in the bush," another source said. "We cannot
get to them and neither can the nomadic communities, for fear of
being killed themselves."
SUDANESE
WOMEN ACTING TO END SEXUAL VIOLENCE
January 25, 2007 – (ReliefWeb) The UN and the African Union
must do more to insist that the Government of Sudan create an enabling
environment to report, investigate and prosecute cases of violence
against women. Militarisation and long-standing armed conflicts
in many regions have deeply affected the daily lives of Sudanese
women, most recently and tragically in Darfur.
DEMOBILISATION
OF FEMALE EX-COMBATANTS IN COLOMBIA
January 25, 2007 – (ReliefWeb) Among the millions of Colombian
IDPs one group is particularly invisible – women and girls
associated with illegal armed groups. The current demobilisation
process does not adequately address the consequences of the sexual
violence they have suffered before, during and after conflict.
AFGHANISTAN'S
EFFORTS TO BOOST WOMEN FALTER
January 19, 2007 (Chicago Tribune ) Sharifa Hamrah does not go to
work much anymore. Her job is just too dangerous, considering the
rocket attacks, the threats on her life and the would-be suicide
bomber who disguised himself as a woman in an attempt to get to
her office. She is no soldier. She carries no gun. Yet Hamrah, 48,
a short woman with a sly smile and a head scarf, has become an unwilling
participant in a war, a potential target like the other women who
work for the Women's Affairs Ministry in Afghanistan. "Our
problem is we cannot go out," said Hamrah, who is head of women's
affairs in troubled southern Paktika province but spends much of
her time in Kabul. "We cannot go to the districts. We cannot
go to the villages. We cannot talk to village elders. We cannot
even talk to women."
ISRAELI
WOMEN CHALLENGE MEANING OF SECURITY
January 19, 2007 (WOMENSENEWS)—"Security for Whom?"
That's the question that two women's organizations will be asking
for the second year in a row next week as they meet on the sidelines
of a prestigious security conference held annually since 2000 in
the scenic coastal city of Herziliya. The central four-day Herziliya
conference, which starts Jan. 21, will feature speakers such as
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, former CIA director James Woolsey
and former Prime Minister of Spain Jose Maria Aznar. Discussions
will include the direction of the Israeli Defense Forces in the
wake of the Second Lebanon War and coping with a "nuclearizing"
Iran.
FEMALE
ACTIVISTS A FORCE IN MALE-DOMINATED GAZA
January 5, 2007 (NPR) Amid ongoing violence in Gaza, Palestinian
women are increasingly moving to the forefront of activism and,
in some cases, taking part in the fighting. Long kept in the social,
political and military background in male-dominated Palestinian
society, women's increased participation marks a significant change.
The activism also takes starkly different forms: Secular women have
led protests against lawlessness in Gaza, while the first suicide
bombing in months by the Islamist group Hamas was carried out by
a 72-year-old Gaza grandmother.
NEPAL:
CALL FOR WOMEN'S PARTICIPATION IN PEACE BID
January 18, 2007 (The rising Nepal): Women's participation is a
must in the peace building process and for sustainable development
in the post-conflict situation, say international experts. The international
and national-level experts discussed on transforming conflict into
peace by sharing opportunities for sustainable development in the
post-conflict environment. The experts shared their experiences
and learning from other conflicts areas during the international
conference on "Sustainable Development in Conflict Environment:
Challenges and Opportunities" organised by the Canadian Centre
for International Studies and Cooperation-Nepal (CECI).
ECUADOR
SAYS NEW DEFENSE MINISTER TO BE A WOMAN
January 27, 2007 - (Reuters) President Rafael Correa of Ecuador
said on Saturday that he will name a woman to the top security job
after the country's first female Defense Minister Guadalupe Larriva
was killed in a helicopter crash earlier this week.
ETHIOPIAN
WOMEN REDISCOVER THEIR ROLES AS PEACE BUILDERS
January 30, 2007 – (Oxfam) By raising awareness of the suffering
produced by conflicts, women help find alternatives to violence.
Tato Boru, 48 and the mother of five children, is a peacemaker.
She leads the Moyale area women's peace council which Oxfam's local
partner, the Research Center for Civic and Human Rights Education
(RCCHE), helped to found.
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For
more country-specific women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
For
more international women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
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Mama Cash:
Campaign 88 Days
December 10 2006 – March 8 2007
Campaign 88
Days is a worldwide effort to raise awareness, take action and mobilize
resources for women’s rights. In the 88 days between International
Human Rights Day (December 10th 2006), and International Women’s
Day (March 8th 2007), women from around the world are banding together
to make a difference for women’s rights. Mama Cash is a women's
fund which finances projects conceived by women; strong women who
set an example for others, who know first-hand experience that it
is possible to turn the tide if women know their rights and claim
them.
For more information,
please visit: http://88days.mamacash.org/page.php?id=446
8 Projects
Supported by Mama Cash
South
Africa: education on AIDS by comic book
The Transformative Human Rights Unit (THRU), uses comic books to
fight social prejudice on hiv infected women. THRU also uses comic
books to inform women about the Equality Courts. Women that need
legal advice because of gender related discrimination they face,
can turn to these easily accessible ‘courts’, where
they get assistance at very low cost.
Israel:
a voice for lesbian women
Aswat, which means voice in Arabic,
was formed in 2003 by a group of women who wanted to add a Palestinian
lesbian voice to the Israeli gay movement. They are a dynamic and
brave group of women who want to break with the taboo around homosexuality.
Aswat members fight for the rights of lesbian women who face triple
discrimination in a country where they’re discriminated against
as Palestinians living under Israeli rule, as women in a male-dominated
society, and as lesbians in an Arab community where there’s
no official word for ‘gay’.
Thailand/Birma: refugee
camps along the border
Karen Women's Organisation (KWO) in Thailand, with membership of
more than 30,000 women from Karen, a district in Burma, supports
and organises Burmese women in the struggle for democracy and equality
in Burma. The country's civil war has led to overflowing refugee
camps along the Thai-Burma border. This is where KWO is active.
KWO Women's Protection Programme empowers refugee women, raises
awareness of their rights, and supports victims of violence through
education and facilitating the exchange of experiences. KWO's Safe
House Project provides a temporary refuge for victims of domestic
violence, rape and trafficking.
Ecuador:
struggle for sexual rights
Although over the last years access to information about contraceptives
has grown in Latin America, many women, particularly young women,
lack knowledge and access to contraceptive methods. Many conservative
groups in society inhibit awareness raising efforts to reach women,
particularly young women, although the use of (emergency) contraception
is legal in Ecuador. Fundacion Desafio (meaning Challenge) is a
courageous group which promotes and protects the right to access
emergency contraception. Their health centre provides services for
a minimal, or no, charge and treats all women regardless of their
age, economic means or marital status.
Poland:
education on sexual behaviour for high school students
Volunteers of the Ponton organization teach high school
students on sexual behaviour and birth control.
Ponton works in the Warschau region, where the lessons are given
at school to students between 14 and 20 years old. ‘We get
questions like “I took one of my mother’s birth control
pills and then had sex. Is this bad for my health?”, says
Anka Grzywacz of Ponton. The questions from young people illustrate
how poorly informed they are about sexuality. As a result teenage
pregnancy in Poland is a serious problem.
Azerbeidzjan:
Femina: monthly supplement to the newspaper
Former Soviet Union (FSU) women appear in the press mostly
as fashion or entertainment figures and rarely as professionals,
experts in their fields or as participants in political and social
processes. The image of a woman as mother and keeper of the hearth
prevails. Nothing is said about women’s unemployment, domestic
violence, problems of women’s entrepreneurs or self-realisation.
The Azeri organisation, Azerbaijan Young Lawyers’ Union (AYLU),
published a monthly supplement to the Russian-Azeri newspaper Zerkalo.
This supplement is called Femina and is devoted to gender equality
in society: equal rights and opportunities.
Bolivia:
Campana 28 de Septiembre
Campana 28 de Septiembre por la despenalizacion del Aborto
en Bolivia aims to reanimate the somewhat dormant Bolivian women’s
movement. Campana 28 de Septiembre organised a national congress
around the theme of legalizing abortion. The event lasted from the
15th through the 17th of June 2006, and one of its accomplishments
was the creation of a ‘platform of demands’ for women’s
reproductive rights.
The goal of the platform is to influence the Morales government
which is in the process of drafting a new constitution. The Bolivian
women’s rights activists argue in the platform of demands
not only for a constitutional right to reproductive freedom, but
also for the separation of church and state and for broadening the
definition of the family beyond the traditional family. Women held
a demonstration and presented the document on September 28th to
the government in front of the national parliament.
Central
Europe: fighting trafficking
The Anti Trafficking Centre is a feminist non-governmental
organization working to eradicate trafficking in human beings, with
the special emphasis on women and girls. The work of ATC focuses
on the causes of the problem of trafficking, such as gender-based
violence, poverty, unemployment, and the lack of safe migration.
ATC organises public advocacy, media campaigns, provides information
to women and girls, and includes men as allies in the struggle for
stopping violence against women, which is one of the root causes
of trafficking in human beings.
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For more women, peace and
security initiatives – in country, regional, global and international,
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/campaigns/global/index.html
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Psychosocial Challenges and Interventions for Women Affected by
Conflict
Critical Half, Bi-annual journal of Women for Women International,
September 2006 Vol. 4 No. 1
The articles in this journal
edition highlight the psychological and social difficulties encountered
by conflict-affected women. The general hardship and trauma of conflict
is often compounded further by gender-based violence, which takes
a heavy toll on women's mental health. Both during war and afterward,
women may feel ongoing anxiety and fear as they worry about soldiers
who might torture or kill them and their loved ones. Women who have
been sexually violated can suffer humiliation and shame, and even
become ostracized by those who consider rape to bring dishonour
to a woman's family and community. Women may also lack the social
support that normally provides solace or assistance in grieving.
The authors discuss ways to design effective psychosocial programs
that facilitate healing and encourage women's active participation
in the reconstruction of their communities. Case studies from Sudan,
Afghanistan, Indonesia, the United Kingdom, Gaza, Croatia, and Nigeria
are provided.
For the full journal please
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/Health/WforW_psychsoc.pdf
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Action on Gender Based
Violence and HIV/AIDS: Bringing Together Research, Policy, Programming
and Advocacy
Center for Women's Global Leadership, January 2007
In response to the human rights
and public health crises posed by both the HIV pandemic and the
unabating levels of gender-based violence (GBV), policy makers,
activists and programmers at international, regional and national
levels have in recent years bolstered attention to the conceptual
and methodological intersections of work in these areas. A small
group of organizations and experts working at the intersection of
GBV and HIV came together to share lessons learned from working
from a variety of entry points, including human rights, gender,
feminism, sexuality, and sexual rights, at global, national and
local levels, using various methods and within different country
contexts. This brief report summarizes discussions, outcomes, and
recommendations from the consultation.
For the full report , please
visit:http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/HIV-AIDS/GBV%20and%20HIVAIDS.pdf
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For NGO and civil society reports, papers and statements, UN and
government reports, and books, journals and articles on women, peace
and security issues, please visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/resourcesindex.html
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5.GENDER
AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE |
PEACEKEEPING News
LIBERIA
GETS ALL-FEMALE PEACEKEEPING FORCE
31 January 2007 - (BBC News) A unit of United Nations peacekeepers
with a difference has arrived for work in Liberia - they are all
women. More than 100 female peacekeepers from India are there to
work as an armed police unit to help stabilize Liberia which, after
years of war, is trying to rebuild its own police force from scratch.
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PEACEKEEPING WATCH
UN’S
LIBERIA MISSION CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE INVESTIGATION INTO POSSIBLE
SEXUAL ABUSE
19 January 2007 – (UN News Centre) The United Nations Mission
in Liberia (UNMIL) has called for an immediate internal investigation
after receiving information about possible sexual exploitation by
some of its staff, a UN spokesperson said today.
JOINT
UN-SUDAN GOVERNMENT TASK FORCE TO DEAL WITH ISSUE OF SEXUAL EXPLOITATION
18 January 2007 –(UN News Center) As part of the United Nations
zero tolerance policy towards sexual exploitation, the world body’s
mission in Sudan today agreed with the Government and the UN Children’s
Fund (UNICEF) to set up a joint task force to foster coordination,
information-sharing and action to stamp out the problem wherever
it may occur.
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GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING Resources:
United Nations Reform:
Improving Peace Operations by Advancing the Role of Women
The Stanley Foundation in cooperation with Women in International
Security, November 2006
In recent years, various international commitments
and declarations have been adopted that recognize the importance
of women's participation in United Nations peace processes. While
there is a growing understanding of the value that women bring to
these efforts, implementation of existing mandates is sporadic.
In spite of past UN efforts, today just 1 percent of peacekeeping
troops are women.
In November 2006, the Stanley Foundation and Women in International
Security (WIIS) convened expert meetings in New York and Washington
to gain further insights into the challenges and opportunities the
United Nations faces in reforming its peace operations and to offer
constructive, actionable measures to assist the United Nations in
its reform efforts.
United Nations Reform: Improving Peace Operations
by Advancing the Role of Women, a new report from the Stanley Foundation,
provides context on these important issues and summarizes the key
findings and recommendations provided in the November meetings.
For the full report visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/Peacekeeping/PDF/stanley_WIIS.pdf
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For PeaceWomen’s Peacekeeping Watch index,
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pkwatch.html
For more gender and peacekeeping news and resources,
visit PeaceWomen’s Gender and Peacekeeping Index:
http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pknews.html
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New Security
Council Members and SCR 1325
UNIFEM and the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace, and Security have
invited the five new members of the Security Council (non-permanent
members as of 01 Jan 2007) to participate in mission-wide workshops
on SCR 1325. The purpose of the workshop is to provide governmental
mission staff with an understanding of SCR 1325, including its contribution
to and purpose in the overall peace and security mandate of the
Security Council (SC). In late January, UNIFEM and the NGOWG, in
coordination with the host government and the Department of Peacekeeping
Operations (DPKO), co-convened the first of these SCR 1325 workshops.
We intend for these types of collaborations to provide an initial
opportunity for mission staff to identify ways to advance women,
peace, and security issues in their daily work and to generate accountability
for the implementation of SCR 1325 in the SC and the UN at-large.
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UNIFEM’s Web Portal on Women, Peace and Security, CLICK
HERE
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7.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Call for Papers: Gender Research Network
Launch Conference: Engendering Policy and Politics International
and comparative challenges and perspectives
21-22 June 2007, University of Manchester
An international, interdisciplinary conference hosted by the Gender
Research Network, School of Social Sciences, University of Manchester,
Chancellor's Conference Centre, 21-22 June 2007, supported by the
Social Policy Association, the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence
at the University of Manchester and the Political Studies Association
Women and Politics Specialist Group.
For more information please visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/frame/calendar/launch_conf.htm
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Making Governance Gender Responsive
19-24 February 2007, Manila, Philippines
Center for Asia Pacific Women in Politics Institute for Gender,
Governance & Leadership
The course is designed for parliamentarians, middle and senior level
government executives and officials, women and men in local governments,
political parties, research and training institutes and civil society
organizations and non-government organizations who are leading or
participating in governance reform initiatives in their respective
countries. The course is composed of modules developed to enhance
the participants’ understanding of the link between gender
and governance as well as increase their awareness of gender biases
in governance.
For more information please visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/frame/calendar/MGGR%20Info%20Sheet
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Commission on the Status of Women, 51st session
26th February - 9th March, UN headquarters, New York
The fifty-first session of the Commission on the Status of Women
will take place from 26 February to 9 March 2007. In accordance
with its multi-year programme of work for 2007-2009, the Commission
will consider “The elimination of all forms of discrimination
and violence against the girl child” as its priority theme.
For more information, please visit http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/51sess.htm
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For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
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